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Friction surfacing of aluminum to steel: Influence of different substrate surface topographies

  • Arne Roos
  • , Franziska Metternich
  • , Zina Kallien*
  • , Jonas Baumann
  • , Jonas Ehrich
  • , Monika Kipp
  • , Stefanie Hanke
  • , Dirk Biermann
  • , Benjamin Klusemann
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In the present study, AA6082 aluminium is deposited onto AISI 4140 steel substrates via friction surfacing (FS). Aiming to understand the influence of substrate surface for the bonding mechanism during the plasticising as well as the deposition phase, three different surface topographies have been manufactured via grinding and machining. Subsequently, FS process parameter dependencies on the deposits have been investigated. The resulting optical appearance, geometry and microstructure of the deposits have been studied. A deeper surface topography was found to facilitate plasticising and therefore FS layer deposition. Defect-free layer-to-substrate (LTS) joints have been generated for all topographies showing a fine-grained recrystallized microstructure as well as flow lines in the AA6082 deposits following closely the substrate surface topography, whereas no metallurgical changes in the AISI4140 substrates have been detected. At the LTS interfaces, a correlation of flow lines to an increased occurrence of high angle grain boundaries is identified. Appearance, geometries and grain size ratios of the AA6082 deposits show a dependency on substrate surface topography. Although complete bonding was achieved in the LTS joints, no distinct diffusion zone or interfacial mixing was observed. Mechanical interlocking on the micro scale was detected only for the samples with ground substrate surfaces.

Original languageEnglish
Article number112390
JournalMaterials and Design
Volume235
Number of pages12
ISSN0264-1275
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.11.2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s)

Research areas and keywords

  • Aluminium
  • Dissimilar welding
  • EBSD
  • Friction surfacing
  • Steel
  • Surface topography
  • Engineering

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Mechanical Engineering
  • Materials Science(all)
  • Mechanics of Materials

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